Museums in United States
Morrison Motor Car Museum
Known also as Backing Up Classics, this museum has more than 50 vehicles on display in 18,000 feet. Featuring classics, antiques, 50s, 60s, muscle cars and a gift shop fully stocked with NASCAR merchandise and automotive collectibles.

Moto Talbott Museum
A lifelong motorcyclist, Robb Talbott loves riding motorcycles, being around motorcycles, andenjoying them for their simple aesthetic value—as art objects. The motorcycles you find at Moto Talbott don’t conform to any one genre. You’ll find bikes from 16 countries, spanning decades. There are pristine examples of iconic bikes, unrestored barn finds, and even the occasional chopper or minibike. You’ll also find artifacts from Robb’s rich family history in and around Carmel and the Old West, historic toys, and the occasional bicycle.

Motorama Auto Museum
Motorama is Wisconsin's largest automobile museum with nearly five acres of inside and outdoor displays. Currently, over 400 vehicles on display divided by theme; race room, bike barn, bone-yard, exotics, military. The museum features many rare and one of a kind vehicles from around the world including the Alfa Heaven collection of over fifty exotic Alfa Romeos, the largest in North America.

Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum
Founded in 1990 by the American Motorcycle Heritage Foundation, the goal of the Motorcycle Hall of Fame is to tell the stories and preserve the history of motorcycling. The AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame features two floors. The upper level honors the lives and careers of AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famers and men and women who have shaped motorcycling in America in racing, rights, design, industry and ambassadorship. The lower level includes themed exhibits, as well as examples of historic motorcycles from the museum’s permanent collection.

Motorsports Hall of Fame of America & Museum
The MSHFA is the only hall of fame that honors all of American motorsports: cars, motorcycles, airplanes, off road and powerboats. Its mission is to celebrate and instill the American values of leadership, creativity, originality, teamwork and spirit of competition found in motorsports. It was founded by Larry G. Ciancio and Ronald A. Watson and conducted its first induction in 1989. Watson spent the next 30 years tirelessly building it into the nation's premier motorsports hall of fame until his sudden passing in 2019.

Motte Historical Museum
Once a produce market from the mid 1980's to the late 1990's, it is now a museum hosting the Motte Family Car Collection and the History of the Valley.

Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry
MATI was established to give a home to the transportation and industrial remnants and to tell the stories of the people and the machines that opened Alaska to exploration and growth.

Museum of History and Industry
The Museum of History & Industry is the largest private heritage organization in Washington attracting visitors from the Northwest and beyond, including thousands of school children. MOHAI collects, preserves and presents the rich history of the Pacific Northwest. Its engaging exhibits and programs, its collection of nearly 4 million historic artifacts, archives and photographs, and its award-winning educational programs have created an appreciation for the Northwest's diverse cultural, social and economic history.

Museum of Off Road Adventure
The Museum of Off Road Adventure collection includes a one-of-a-kind early 4×4 fire truck, some vintage Japanese 4×4’s, unique military vehicles, and much more

Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago
See your heartbeat 13-feet tall, climb aboard a World War II German submarine, take a tour of your digestive system, plunge into a working coal mine or control a 40-foot tornado. Journey through a mathematical mirror maze. Plunge into a working coal mine. Step into the future. Those experiences and more await you at the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago - the largest science museum in the Western Hemisphere and home to thousands of exhibits, artifacts and "wow" moments that last a lifetime.
